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Dress Codes

How the Laws of Fashion Made History

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For centuries, clothing has been a wearable status symbol; fashion, a weapon in struggles for social change; and dress codes, a way to maintain political control. Dress codes evolved along with the social and political ideals of the day, but they always reflected struggles for power and status. In the 1700s, South Carolina's "Negro Act" made it illegal for Black people to dress "above their condition." In the 1920s, the bobbed hair and form-fitting dresses worn by free-spirited flappers were banned in workplaces throughout the United States, and in the 1940s the baggy zoot suits favored by Black and Latino men caused riots in cities from coast to coast.
Even in today's more informal world, dress codes still determine what we wear, when we wear it—and what our clothing means. And even when there are no written rules, implicit dress codes still influence opportunities and social mobility. Silicon Valley CEOs wear t-shirts and flip flops, setting the tone for an entire industry: women wearing fashionable dresses or high heels face ridicule in the tech world and some venture capitalists refuse to invest in any company run by someone wearing a suit.
In Dress Codes, law professor and cultural critic Richard Thompson Ford presents an insightful and entertaining history of the laws of fashion from the middle ages to the present day.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Narrator Bill Andrew Quinn uses a strong voice and steady pace to narrate this study of fashion's written and unwritten rules through the ages. His deep pitch and sophisticated tone fit discussions of power dressing and status symbols. The audiobook's wide scope examines apparel as well as hair and makeup styles that have influenced societal change and vice versa. A law professor and cultural critic, the author uses court cases to showcase contested dress codes over decades. The often-dark stories behind past fashion trends provide an eye-opening view of the ethical implications of garments and the often contradictory customs that hurt marginalized people the most. Quinn emphasizes key words with pauses and a slight uptick in volume to convey subtle meaning in historical passages. A.L.C. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 23, 2020
      Ford (Rights Gone Wrong), a Stanford University law professor, delivers an intriguing history of formal and informal rules governing what people wear. He details laws against “sumptuous clothing” in medieval and Renaissance Europe, and reveals that the Catholic church established dress codes partly to “stabilize the relationship between attire, sex, and religious faith.” (In 1434, Ford notes, the Bishop of Ferrara in Northern Italy decreed that only prostitutes could wear dresses with trains.) Ford’s wide-ranging survey also discusses the toga in ancient Rome, “monstrously extravagant” trunk hose worn by men in Elizabethan England, powdered wigs in colonial America, and zoot suit–clad Latinos who were attacked by white mobs in East L.A. during WWII. Photographs and drawings illuminate both the titillating (a nun’s habit as fetish wear in Victorian England) and the mundane (the modern-day “Midtown Uniform” of an Oxford shirt, khaki pants, and Patagonia fleece vest). Among the plethora of sartorial arcana, Ford notes that in some 15th-century Italian cities, Christian women were forbidden from wearing earrings, while it was illegal for Jewish women not to wear them (and thereby “ to exhibit a visible sign of her community”). Though Ford’s sprawling overview drags in some sections, he makes a convincing case that dress codes reveal much about the social order and the pursuit of individual liberty. This jam-packed history casts its subject in a new light.

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  • English

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